A Hard White Body
Candice Lin
This publication showcases A Hard White Body, an evolving project by Candice Lin presented at Bétonsalon – centre for art and research, Paris; at Portikus, Frankfurt/Main; and at the Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts, University of Chicago. A Hard White Body weaves together material and nonhuman histories alongside the life and work of three historical figures: American writer James Baldwin (1924–1987); French explorer and global traveler Jeanne Baret (1740–1807); and artist and naturalist Maria Sibylla Merian (1647–1717). Lin uses porcelain, a material whose history includes nineteenth century imperial and scientific uses, to highlight fantasies surrounding whiteness and purity, only to subject her porcelain assemblages to pungent organic materials. She thus stages processes of contamination between organic and inorganic materials, creating an unstable sculptural ecosystem. In addition to an essay by curator Lotte Arndt that discusses the various iterations of Lin’s project, the publication features an essay by Rizvana Bradley; a conversation between Jih-Fei Cheng and Mel Y. Chen; and a conversation between the artist and C. Riley Snorton. These texts are accompanied by a visual essay by the artist and a selection of exhibition views.
Direction: Alyssa Brubaker et Katja Rivera
Texts: Mélanie Bouteloup, Bill Michel and Philippe Pirotte; Lotte Arndt and Yesomi Umolu; Lotte Arndt, Rizvana Bradley, Mel Y. Chen and Jih-Fei Cheng; Candice Lin
Graphic design: Studio ELLA
Edited by Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts at the University of Chicago, with the support of Elizabeth Firestone Graham Foundation and Hessische Kulturstiftung.
Distribution: The University of Chicago Press
Publication: 2019
English edition
14.5 x 23 cm
160 pages
ISBN 978-0-692-13836-6
35 €
The publication can be purchased at Bétonsalon – centre for art and research, and is available for mail order (cost of the book + postage).
This publication wouldn’t have been possible without François Ghebably, Los Angeles.